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Limit Pricing, Capacity Expansion and Entry Deterrence

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Deterred entry: the incumbent acts to prevent an additional firm from entering ... the incumbent must convince the entrant that the market after the entrant comes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Limit Pricing, Capacity Expansion and Entry Deterrence


1
Limit Pricing, Capacity Expansion and Entry
Deterrence
2
Introduction
  • A firm that can restrict output to raise market
    price has market power
  • Microsoft, Kodak, IBM, Telecom are giants in
    their industries
  • Have maintained their dominant position for many
    years
  • Why cant existing rivals compete away the
    position of such firms?
  • Why arent new rivals lured by the profits?
  • Answer firms with monopoly power may
  • eliminate existing rivals
  • prevent entry of new firms
  • These actions are predatory conduct if they are
    profitable only if rivals, in fact, exit
  • e.g., RD to reduce costs is not predatory

3
Barriere allentrata
  • gt Bain (1956) approccio strutturalista.
  • BE situazione in cui le imprese esistenti
    possono aumentare i loro prezzi di vendita al di
    sopra dei costi minimi di produzione senza
    indurre rivali potenziali all'entrata.
  • Vantaggi assoluti nei costi
  • Economie di scala
  • Differenziazione del prodotto

4
  • Vantaggi assoluti nei costi. Quando l'impresa
    esistente può produrre la stessa quantità del
    potenziale entrante a costi inferiori.
  • learning by doing
  • brevetti su tecnologie di processo più efficienti
  • condizioni migliori nell'acquisto di inputs (es.
    capitali finanziari, sconti)

5
  • Economie di scala. BE se la scala minima
    efficiente rappresenta una porzione rilevante
    della domanda.
  • Le nuove imprese
  • se entrano alla SME aumentano troppo l'offerta ?
    abbassano i prezzi ? riducono i profitti
  • se entrano ad una scala lt SME, hanno costi gt dei
    concorrenti.

6
  • Differenziazione del prodotto. Fedeltà alla
    marca. I potenziali entranti devono sostenere
    investimenti in pubblicità, o praticare forti
    sconti.
  • gt Stigler (1968)
  • BE costo di produzione che deve essere sostenuto
    dai potenziali entranti ma che non è sostenuto
    dalle imprese esistenti.

7
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
  • Blockaded entry market conditions are such that
    no additional firm can profitably enter the
    market, even if the incumbent produces the
    monopoly output so it is unnecessary for the
    incumbent to act strategically to prevent entry.
  • Deterred entry the incumbent acts to prevent an
    additional firm from entering because it pays to
    do so.
  • Accomodated entry it doesnt pay for the
    incumbent to prevent entry through strategic
    action

8
Predatory conduct and limit pricing
  • Predatory actions come in two broad forms
  • Limit pricing prices so low that entry is
    deterred
  • Predatory pricing prices so low that existing
    firms are driven out
  • Outcome of either action is the samethe
    monopolist retains control of the market
  • Legal action focuses on predatory pricing because
    this case has an identifiable victim
  • a firm that was in the market but that has left
  • Consider first a model of limit pricing
  • Stackelberg leader chooses output first
  • entrant believes that the leader is committed to
    this output choice
  • entrant has decreasing costs over some initial
    level of output

9
A limit pricing model (Bain, Sylos Labini)
Then the entrants residual demand is R1 D(P)
- Q1
By committing to output Qd the incumbent
deters entry. Market price Pd is the limit price
These are the cost curves for the potential
entrant
/unit
With the residual demand R1, the entrant can
operate profitably.Entry is not deterred by the
incumbent choosing Q1.
At price Pe entry is unprofitable
R1
The entrant equates marginal revenue with
marginal cost
MCe
The entrants residual demand is Re D(P) - Qd
Pd
ACe
Assume that the incumbent commits to output Q1
Assume instead that the incumbent commits to
output Qd
Then the entrants marginal revenue is MRe
Pe
D(P) Market Demand
Re
MRe
Quantity
Q1
qe
Qd
Qd
10
Limit pricing
  • Committing to output Qd may be aimed either at
    eliminating an existing rival or driving out a
    potential entrant.
  • Either way, several questions arise
  • Is limit pricing more profitable than other
    strategies?
  • Is the output commitment credible?
  • If output is costly to adjust then commitment is
    possible
  • why should this property hold?
  • could be claimed to be ad hoc to support the
    theory
  • even if it holds, is monopoly at output Qd better
    than Cournot?
  • may not be if the entrants costs are low enough
  • Credibility may relate output to capacity

11
Capacity expansion and entry deterrence
  • For predation to be successful and rational
  • the incumbent must convince the entrant that the
    market after the entrant comes in will not be
    profitable one
  • How can the incumbent credibly make this threat?
  • One possible mechanism
  • install capacity in advance of production
  • installed capacity is a commitment to a minimum
    level of output
  • the lead firm can manipulate entrants through
    capacity choice
  • the lead firm may be able to deter entry through
    its capacity choice
  • but is this credible?
  • capacity must be costly to install and should be
    irreversible

12
Whether an Incumbent Pays to Prevent Entry

Second stage
First stage
p
,
p
)
(
i
e
Do not enter
(
p
, 0)
m
Do not pay
Entrant
Enter
(
p
,
p


R



F
)
d
d
Incumbent
Pay for exclusive rights (entry is impossible)
(

b
, 0)
p


m
13
Noncredible Threat
(
p
,
p
)
i
e
Cournot output
(300, 300)
Incumbent
Large output
(

100,

100)
14
Game Trees for the Deterred Entry and
Stackelberg Equilibria
(a) Entrant

s Fixed Cost Is 100.
(
p
,
p
)
i
e
Do not enter
(900, 0)
q
30)
Accommodate (
i
Entrant
Enter
(450, 125)
Incumbent
Do not enter
(800, 0)
Deter (
q
40)
i
Entrant
Enter
(400, 0)
(b) Entrant

s Fixed Cost Is 16.
Do not enter
(900, 0)
Accommodate (
q
30)
i
Entrant
Enter
(450, 209)
Incumbent
Do not enter
(416, 0)
Deter (
q
52)
i
Entrant
Enter
(208, 0)
15
Entrants Best Response and Profit P 60 Q
60 (qi qj) P A BQ mc 0, Best
response qi 30 qj/2 qi (A mc)/2B
qj/2

16
Cournot and Stackelberg Equilibria
(a) Best-Response Curves
q
, Units
e
per period
60
Incumbent

s best-response curve
30
e
c
20
e
s
15
Entrant

s
best-response curve
0
30
20
60
q
, Units per period
i
(b) Incumbent

s Profit
p
, per period
i
450
400
p
i
0
30
20
60
q
, Units per period
i
17
Incumbent Commits to a Large Quantity to Deter
Entry Fixed cost of entry 100
(a) Entrant

s Best-Response Curve
q
, Units per period
e
30
Entrant

s best-response curve
e
s
15
e
d
10
0
30
40
60
q
, Units per period
(b) Incumbent
s Profit

p
, Incumbent

s
i
Profit per period,
900
800
p
m
p
i
450
p
s
0
30
40
60
q
, Units per period
18
Incumbent Loss If It Deters Entry Fixed cost of
entry 16
(a) Entrant

s Best-Response Curve
q
, Units per period
e
30
Entrant

s best-response curve
e
s
15
0
30
52
60
q
, Units per period
i
(b) Incumbent

s Profit
p
, per period
i
900
p
m
450
416
p
i
p
s
0
30
52
60
q
, Units per period
i
19
Conclusioni / 1
  • Se il costo di entrata è molto alto, il
    monopolista può produrre loutput di monopolio
    senza preoccuoarsi della minaccia di entrata ?
    entrata bloccata
  • Se il costo di entrata è molto basso, il
    monopolista dovrebbe scegliere il livello di
    produzione ottimale lungo la funzione di reazione
    dellentrante ? entrata accomodata
  • Per valori intermedi del costo di entrata, il
    monopolista sceglie una capacità produttiva
    appena sufficiente a scoraggiare lentrata ?
    entrata scoraggiata

20
Conclusioni / 2
  • Lespansione della capacità produttiva è una
    strategia credibile di deterrenza allentrata
    solo se i costi sono elevati e irrecuperabili
    (sunk).

21
Investment Game Tree
(
p
,
p
)
i
e
Do not enter
(900, 0)
Do not invest
Entrant
Enter
(400, 300)
Incumbent
Do not enter
(500, 0)
Invest
Entrant
Enter

(132,
36)
22
Raising-Costs Game Tree
(
p
,
p
)
i
e
Do not enter
(10, 0)
Do not raise costs
Entrant
Enter
(3, 3)
Incumbent
Do not enter
(6, 0)
Raise costs 4
Entrant
Enter
(
1,

1)

23
Evidence on Strategic Entry Deterrence
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